Springfield News-Sun

Biden either backs Scott’s police bill or he’s just a liar

- Marc A. Thiessen Marc A. Thiessen writes for The Washington Post.

The guilty verdicts in the Derek Chauvin trial give President Joe Biden a once-in-a-presidency opportunit­y to deliver on his promise of unity and bipartisan­ship. To seize it, he should immediatel­y call Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., and offer to work with him to pass bipartisan police reform legislatio­n.

After the murder of George Floyd last summer, Scott wanted to bring Republican­s and Democrats together to get something done on police reform. As a Black man who had experience­d police discrimina­tion, he did not want to let the moment pass without bipartisan action. So he introduced the Justice Act and incorporat­ed a number of Democratic proposals into his legislatio­n, including making lynching a federal hate crime, creating a national policing commission to conduct a review of the U.S. criminal justice system, collecting data on police use of force, barring the use of chokeholds by federal officers, withholdin­g federal funds to state and local law enforcemen­t agencies that do not similarly bar chokeholds and withholdin­g funds to police department­s that fail to report to the Justice Department when no-knock warrants are used.

Scott’s bill could have been the basis of bipartisan compromise. But five months away from a presidenti­al election, Democrats were not interested in bipartisan­ship. Rather than work with Scott, Democratic leaders attacked him. Sen. Richard J. Durbin (Ill.), the second-ranking Democrat in the Senate, called Scott’s bill a “token, halfhearte­d approach.” (Durbin apologized for using the word “token” after Scott said it “hurts my soul.”) House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (Calif.) said Scott’s bill was “trying to get away with murder, actually. The murder of George Floyd.”

Despite these shameful personal attacks, Scott still tried to reach across the aisle. At his urging, then-senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell, R-KY., offered to allow unlimited amendments, and Scott promised to help filibuster his own bill if Democrats did not get votes they sought. He even told his Democratic colleagues he would vote to support some of their amendments to improve the bill, such as expanding the definition of chokeholds and collecting data not just on serious bodily injury and death but on all uses of force by police. With Scott on board, many of those Democratic amendments would have gotten enough Republican support to pass. And if the final result was still not satisfacto­ry, Democrats would have had another chance to improve the bill further in negotiatio­ns with the House.

But instead of taking Scott’s outstretch­ed hand, Senate Democrats voted to filibuster his bill — using the tool they now dismiss as a Jim Crow relic to stop a Black senator from moving forward with police reform. “Some friends who I respect on the other side of the aisle basically said they were shut down during [Democratic] conference meetings,” Scott told me. “One said 12 people stood up and said, ‘We should vote on Tim Scott’s bill and, frankly, we should quit demonizing the bill.’” But in the end only three members of the Democratic caucus — Sens. Angus King, I-maine, Joe Manchin III, D-W.VA., and Doug Jones, D-ala. — voted to advance Scott’s bill, killing any chance of passing police reform.

After his election,

Biden declared that the “refusal of Democrats and Republican­s to cooperate with one another ... is a choice we make.” If Biden chooses not to cooperate on this issue, then his inaugural promise to put his “whole soul” into uniting our country was a lie.

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